Deviousness
and bullying are the hallmarks of the Clinton administration.
They are abundantly evident in its persecution of Wen Ho
Lee, the Los Alamos nuclear weapons scientist, currently
under indictment and being denied bail. Last March we were
told that Lee, a naturalized U.S. citizen born in Taiwan,
was suspected of being a Chinese spy. He had allegedly passed
on to Beijing the secrets of the W-88 advanced miniaturized
nuclear warhead, supposedly Americas most sophisticated
piece of weaponry. Months went by and no charges were proffered.
Finally, in December, Lee was arrested and charged 
not with espionage, however, but with mishandling secret
nuclear weapons data.

This
was odd, to say the least. The government admits that the
59 counts it has charged Lee with have nothing to do with
the earlier investigation. The "mishandling" referred
to in the indictment took place in 1993 and 1994. The W-88
design, however, was supposed to have come into Chinas
possession in 1980s. The weapon was allegedly first exploded
in 1992. The government also admits that it has found no
evidence  despite three years of intensive investigation
 that Lee had spied for China or for anyone else.
"It seems abundantly clear that we cant, from
anything we have, conclude Wen Ho Lee disclosed the W-88
information," a U.S. official is quoted as saying.

The
government claims that Lee moved vast amounts of secret
data  "sufficient to build a functional thermonuclear
weapon"  to an unclassified computer system.
He then transferred the files on to 15 computer tapes. Lee
argues that he did this to make his work easier. Six of
the tapes were found in his office. Two were determined
to contain unclassified data. And seven are missing. Lee
says he destroyed them. The government says there is no
evidence that he has done so. But there is no evidence that
he has not done so either. Yet the government succeeded
in denying Lee bail. The FBI claims that releasing Lee on
bail would force the agency to commit vast numbers of Chinese-speaking
agents and translators fluent in both Mandarin and Cantonese
to monitor his communications so as to ensure that he did
not turn over the tapes to foreign governments. At a recent
hearing the judge agreed. Lee did indeed pose an "unprecedented"
threat to national security.

The
claim is bizarre. According to the government, Lee transferred
the "classified" material in 1993 and 1994. So
how come he still has not gotten around to passing it on
to a foreign power?

Wen
Ho Lee, a 60-year-old man, now sits in a prison in New Mexico.
The trial is probably at least a year away. He has surrendered
his passport and has offered to take a polygraph test. He
is permitted to see his family for only one hour per week.
An FBI agent is present throughout. And the conversation
has to be in English.

Lees
treatment is very different from that of John Deutch, former
director of Central Intelligence. Thirty-nine of the counts
Lee has been charged with carry maximum sentences of life
imprisonment. What happened to Deutch? Last August it was
revealed that Deutch had worked on classified material on
his unsecured desktop computer at home. His punishment?
His security clearance was suspended. No jail time. But
then Deutch, unlike Lee, is pals with Strobe Talbott and
other Friends of Bill.

The
Chinese nuclear spy scare was a crock from the beginning. Typically,
the most ridiculous articles appeared in TheNew York
Times. Reporters regularly spluttered about "one of the
most damaging spy cases in recent history." They fulminated
at alleged government inaction. And they repeatedly called for
"arrests." But who was to be arrested? What exactly
had the Chinese done?

Hard
as it may be for our superannuated Cold Warriors to grasp this,
China has been a nuclear power since 1964. It really makes not
the slightest bit of difference if China acquires a few more missiles
or smaller warheads or more accurate guidance systems. No one
is thereby less secure than before. Since China stubbornly refuses
to engage in aggressive behavior against anyone, it is reasonable
to assume that its nuclear missiles are weapons of last resort.
As nuclear powers go, China, after all, is very much of the second-division
sort. At present it has 20 intercontinental ballistic missiles.
The United States has about 5000. China also stopped nuclear testing
in 1995.

It
is very flattering for Americans to assume that no one in the
world could possibly develop nuclear weapons other than through
stealing their secrets. But where are Chinas spies? Back
in the Cold War, the FBI used to pick up a Soviet spy a day. So
who is spying for Beijing? Last May a House select committee chaired
by Rep. Christopher Cox published a report with this startling
conclusion: "The Peoples Republic of China (PRC) has
stolen classified design information on the United States
most advanced thermonuclear weapons... The successful penetration
by the PRC of our nuclear weapons laboratories has taken place
over the last several decades, and almost certainly continues
to the present."

Wonderful
stuff. But what is the evidence for this? Who penetrated our nuclear
laboratories? What exactly was stolen? The Cox committee could
come up with nothing better than again Wen Ho Lee (even though
it did not name him) and again the W-88
warhead.

Both
claims are extremely dubious. Back in 1995 a Chinese official
approached the CIA and handed over a Chinese document dated 1988.
It described the countrys nuclear weapons program and allegedly
mentioned the W-88, describing some of the warheads key
design features. The CIA later decided that the official was working
for Chinese intelligence all along. This was a reasonable assumption.
Spies regularly approach the intelligence services of foreign
powers with "information" about supposed "penetration."
The aim is to sow confusion and to divert attention from real
spies to nonexistent ones.

The
Chinese succeeded beyond their wildest dreams. Since 1995 Americans
have been obsessing about the "penetration" of Los Alamos
even though there was not a scrap of evidence that it had taken
place.

For
all the overheated bluster about the alleged ultramodern W-88
design, it is actually 30 years old. Last June President Clintons
Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board reported that technical information
about the W-88 "had been widely available within the U.S.
nuclear weapons community" as early as 1983. Much of the
information about U.S. nuclear weapons systems is available on
websites. Indeed, recently the FBI took to publicly complaining
that Chinese espionage is difficult to investigate because the
Chinese often take advantage of scientific exchanges and many
other forms of informal contacts. Apparently, they gather sensitive
information from such a wide range of sources that it is often
difficult to pinpoint exactly how American secrets leaked out.
The scoundrels  going to conferences and seminars to find
out what U.S. scientists are up to!

So
why is Lee being persecuted? For Clinton, scapegoating Lee is
very convenient. First, it distracts attention from the 1996 election
fundraising scandal. Cracking down on alleged Chinese "spies"
ensures that Al Gore will not be troubled by questions about his
having accepted money from the Chinese government. Second, if
Lee had spied for the Chinese then he must have been doing it
back in the 1980s. Consequently, the "loss" of Americas
secrets can be blamed on Reagan and Bush.

Third,
the ludicrous story of Chinese "penetration" of our
laboratories has served to swamp the real story. It was the Clinton
administration itself that revealed to the world most of Americas
nuclear "secrets." As William Broad explained it in
the Times: "Back in 1993...the Administration decided
that the best way to keep the nuclear arms race from heating up
again was to get the worlds nations to sign a test-ban treaty.
The idea was that even if a country knew how to make a bomb, it
couldnt perfect new ones...without physically testing new
designs. So development of new weapons would be frozen... Releasing
many of Americas nuclear secrets was seen as an essential
part of this strategy, since it would signal a new global order
in which nuclear know-how was suddenly and irreparably devalued."

A
60-year-old man sits in a prison cell in New Mexico and faces
the prospect of never coming out again. He is paying a heavy price
for Clintons slimy political maneuverings. Sadly, he is
not the first nor will he be the last person to do so.